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6351-01-P
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 23 and 140
RIN 3038-AC97
Margin Requirements for Uncleared Swaps for Swap Dealers and Major Swap
Participants
AGENCY: Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
ACTION: Proposed Rule; Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking.
SUMMARY: The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (Commissionor
CFTC) is proposing regulations to implement section 4s(e) of the Commodity
Exchange Act (CEA), as added by section 731 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act). This provision requires the
Commission to adopt initial and variation margin requirements for certain swap dealers
(SDs) and major swap participants (MSPs). The proposed rules would establish
initial and variation margin requirements for SDs and MSPs but would not require SDs
and MSPs to collect margin from non-financial end users. In this release, the
Commission is also issuing an Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking requesting
public comment on the cross-border application of such margin requirements. The
Commission is not proposing rules on this topic at this time. It is seeking public
comment on several potential alternative approaches.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before [INSERT DATE 60 DAYS AFTER
DATE OF PUBLICATION IN THE FEDERAL REGISTER].
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submissions that have been redacted, or removed that contain comments on the merits of
the rulemaking will be retained in the public comment file and will be considered as
required under the Administrative Procedure Act and other applicable laws, and may be
accessible under the Freedom of Information Act.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: John C. Lawton, Deputy Director,
Division of Clearing and Risk, 202-418-5480, [email protected]; Thomas J. Smith,
Deputy Director, Division of Swap Dealer and Intermediary Oversight, 202-418-5495,
[email protected]; Rafael Martinez, Financial Risk Analyst, Division of Swap Dealer and
Intermediary Oversight, 202-418-5462, [email protected]; Francis Kuo, Attorney,
Division of Swap Dealer and Intermediary Oversight, 202-418-5695, [email protected]; or
Stephen A. Kane, Research Economist, Office of Chief Economist, 202-418-5911,
[email protected]; Commodity Futures Trading Commission, 1155 21st Street, NW,
Washington DC 20581.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
A. Statutory Authority
On July 21, 2010, President Obama signed the Dodd-Frank Act.1 Title VII of the
Dodd-Frank Act amended the CEA2to establish a comprehensive regulatory framework
designed to reduce risk, to increase transparency, and to promote market integrity within
the financial system by, among other things: (1) providing for the registration and
regulation of SDs and MSPs; (2) imposing clearing and trade execution requirements on
1See Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, Pub. L. No. 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376(2010).27 U.S.C. 1 et seq.
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standardized derivative products; (3) creating recordkeeping and real-time reporting
regimes; and (4) enhancing the Commissions rulemaking and enforcement authorities
with respect to all registered entities and intermediaries subject to the Commissions
oversight.
Section 731 of the Dodd-Frank Act added a new section 4s to the CEA setting
forth various requirements for SDs and MSPs. Section 4s(e) mandates the adoption of
rules establishing margin requirements for SDs and MSPs.3 Each SD and MSP for
which there is a Prudential Regulator, as defined below, must meet margin requirements
established by the applicable Prudential Regulator, and each SD and MSP for which
there is no Prudential Regulator must comply with the Commissions regulations
governing margin.
The term Prudential Regulator is defined in section 1a(39) of the CEA, as
amended by Section 721 of the Dodd-Frank Act. This definition includes the Federal
Reserve Board (FRB); the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC); the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC); the Farm Credit Administration; and
the Federal Housing Finance Agency.
The definition specifies the entities for which these agencies act as Prudential
Regulators. These consist generally of federally insured deposit institutions, farm credit
banks, federal home loan banks, the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, and the
Federal National Mortgage Association. The FRB is the Prudential Regulator under
section 4s not only for certain banks, but also for bank holding companies, certain
3Section 4s(e) also directs the Commission to adopt capital requirements for SDs and MSPs. TheCommission proposed capital rules in 2011. Capital Requirements for Swap Dealers and Major SwapParticipants, 76 FR 27802 (May 12, 2011). The Commission will address capital requirements in aseparate release.
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foreign banks treated as bank holding companies, and certain subsidiaries of these bank
holding companies and foreign banks. The FRB is not, however, the Prudential
Regulator for nonbank subsidiaries of bank holding companies, some of which are
required to be registered with the Commission as SDs or MSPs. In general, therefore,
the Commission is required to establish margin requirements for all registered SDs and
MSPs that are not subject to a Prudential Regulator. These include, among others,
nonbank subsidiaries of bank holding companies, as well as certain foreign SDs and
MSPs.
Specifically, section 4s(e)(1)(B) of the CEA provides that each registered SD and
MSP for which there is not a Prudential Regulator shall meet such minimum capital
requirements and minimum initial margin and variation margin requirements as the
Commission shall by rule or regulation prescribe.
Section 4s(e)(2)(B) provides that the Commission shall adopt rules for SDs and
MSPs, with respect to their activities as an SD or an MSP, for which there is not a
Prudential Regulator imposing (i) capital requirements and (ii) both initial and variation
margin requirements on all swaps that are not cleared by a registered derivatives clearing
organization (DCO).
Section 4s(e)(3)(A) provides that to offset the greater risk to the SD or MSP and
the financial system arising from the use of swaps that are not cleared, the requirements
imposed under section 4s(e)(2) shall (i) help ensure the safety and soundness of the SD or
MSP and (ii) be appropriate for the risk associated with the non-cleared swaps.
Section 4s(e)(3)(C) provides, in pertinent part, that in prescribing margin
requirements the Prudential Regulator and the Commission shall permit the use of
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margin requirement for physically settled foreign exchange (FX) forwards and swaps.
The framework also would not apply initial margin requirements to the fixed physically-
settled FX component of cross-currency swaps.
2. Financial firms and systemically important nonfinancial entities (covered
entities) must exchange initial and variation margin.
The 2013 international framework recommends bilateral exchange of initial and
variation margin for non-cleared derivatives between covered entities. The precise
definition of covered entities is to be determined by each national regulator, but in
general should include financial firms and systemically important non-financial entities.
Sovereigns, central banks, certain multilateral development banks, the Bank for
International Settlements (BIS), and non-systemic, non-financial firms are not included as
covered entities.
Under the 2013 international framework, all covered entities that engage in non-
cleared derivatives should exchange, on a bilateral basis, the full amount of variation
margin with a zero threshold on a regular basis (e.g., daily). All covered entities are also
expected to exchange, on a bilateral basis, initial margin with a threshold not to exceed
50 million. The threshold applies on a consolidatedgroup, rather than legal entity,
basis. In addition, and in light of the permitted initial margin threshold, the 2013
international framework recommends that entities with a level of non-cleared derivative
activity of8 billion notional or more would be subject to initial margin requirements.
3. The methodologies for calculating initial and variation margin should (i) be
consistent across covered entities, and (ii) ensure that all counterparty risk
exposures are covered with a high degree of confidence.
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The 2013 international framework states that the potential future exposure of a
non-cleared derivative should reflect an estimate of an increase in the value of the
instrument that is consistent with a one-tailed 99% confidence level over a 10-day
horizon (or longer, if variation margin is not collected on a daily basis), based on
historical data that incorporates a period of significant financial stress.
The 2013 international framework permits the amount of initial margin to be
calculated by reference to internal models approved by the relevant national regulator or
a standardized margin schedule, but covered entities should not cherry pick between
the two calculation methods. Models may allow for conceptually sound and empirically
demonstrable portfolio risk offsets where there is an enforceable netting agreement in
effect. However, portfolio risk offsets may only be recognized within, and not across,
certain well-defined asset classes: credit, equity, interest rates and foreign exchange, and
commodities. A covered entity using the standardized margin schedule may adjust the
gross initial margin amount (notional exposure multiplied by the relevant percentage in
the table) by a net-to-gross ratio, which is also used in the bank counterparty credit risk
capital rules to reflect a degree of netting of derivative positions that are subject to an
enforceable netting agreement.
4. To ensure that assets collected as collateral can be liquidated in a reasonable
amount of time to generate proceeds that could sufficiently protect covered
entities from losses in the event of a counterparty default, these assets should be
highly liquid and should, after accounting for an appropriate haircut, be able to
hold their value in a time of financial stress.
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The 2013 international framework recommends that national supervisors develop
a definitive list of eligible collateral assets. The 2013 international framework includes
examples of permissible collateral types, provides a schedule of standardized haircuts,
and indicates that model-based haircuts may be appropriate. In the event that a dispute
arises over the value of eligible collateral, the 2013 international framework provides that
both parties should make all necessary and appropriate efforts, including timely initiation
of dispute resolution protocols, to resolve the dispute and exchange any required margin
in a timely fashion.
5. Initial margin should be exchanged on a gross basis and held in such a way as to
ensure that (i) the margin collected is immediately available to the collecting
party in the event of the counterpartys default, and (ii) the collected margin is
subject to arrangements that fully protect the posting party.
The 2013 international framework provides that collateral collected as initial
margin from a customer (defined as a buy-side financial firm) should be segregated
from the initial margin collectors proprietary assets. The initial margin collector also
should give the customer the option to individually segregate its initial margin from other
customers margin. In very specific circumstances, the initial margin collector may use
margin provided by the customer to hedge the risks associated with the customers
positions with a third party. To the extent that the customer consents to rehypothecation,
it should be permitted only where applicable insolvency law gives the customer
protection from risk of loss of initial margin in instances where either or both of the
initial margin collector and the third party become insolvent. Where a customer has
consented to rehypothecation and adequate legal safeguards are in place, the margin
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collector and the third party to which customer collateral is rehypothecated should
comply with additional restrictions detailed in the 2013 international framework,
including a prohibition on any further rehypothecation of the customers collateralby the
third party.
6. Requirements for transactions between affiliates are left to the national
supervisors.
The 2013 international framework recommends that national supervisors establish
margin requirements for transactions between affiliates as appropriate in a manner
consistent with each jurisdictions legal and regulatory framework.
7. Requirements for margining non-cleared derivatives should be consistent and
non-duplicative across jurisdictions.
Under the 2013 international framework, home-country supervisors may allow a
covered entity to comply with a host-countrys margin regime if the host-country margin
regime is consistent with the 2013 international framework. A branch may be subject to
the margin requirements of either the headquarters jurisdiction or the host country.
8. Margin requirements should be phased in over an appropriate period of time.
The 2013 international framework phases in margin requirements between
December 2015 and December 2019. Covered entities should begin exchanging variation
margin by December 1, 2015. The date on which a covered entity should begin to
exchange initial margin with a counterparty depends on the notional amount of non-
cleared derivatives (including physically settled FX forwards and swaps) entered into
both by its consolidated corporate group and by the counterpartys consolidated corporate
group.
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these positions.11 AIG was unable to meet its obligations and the Federal Reserve and the
Department of the Treasury expended large sums of money to meet these obligations.12
A key reason for this difference in the performance of cleared and uncleared
swaps is that DCOs use variation margin and initial margin as the centerpiece of their risk
management programs while these tools often were not universally used in connection
with uncleared swaps. Consequently, in designing the proposed margin rules for
uncleared swaps, the Commission has built upon the sound practices for risk management
employed by central counterparties for decades.
Variation margin serves as a mechanism for periodically recognizing changes in
the value of open positions and reducing unrealized losses to zero. Open positions are
marked to their current market value each day and funds are transferred between the
parties to reflect any change in value since the previous time the positions were marked.
This process prevents losses from accumulating over time and thereby reduces both the
chance of default and the size of any default should one occur.
Initial margin serves as a performance bond against potential future losses. If a
party fails to meet its obligation to pay variation margin, resulting in a default, the other
party may use initial margin to cover some or all of any loss. Because the payment of
variation margin prevents losses from compounding over an extended period of time,
11See The Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, The Financial Crisis Inquiry Report: Final Report of theNational Commission on the Causes of the Financial and Economic Crisis in the United States (OfficialGovernment Edition) at 265-268 (2011), available at http://fcic-static.law.stanford.edu/cdn_media/fcic-reports/fcic_final_report_full.pdf.12Id. at 344352, 350. See also United States Department of the Treasury, Office of Financial Stability,Troubled Asset Relief Program, Four Year Retrospective: An Update on the Wind Down of TARP, pp. 3,18-19. Treasury and the Federal Reserve committed $182 billion to stabilize AIG. Ultimately all of thiswas recovered plus a return of $22.7 billion.
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initial margin only needs to cover any additional losses that might accrue between the
previous time that variation margin was paid and the time that the position is liquidated.
Well-designed margin systems protect both parties to a trade as well as the overall
financial system. They serve both as a check on risk-taking that might exceed a partys
financial capacity and as a resource that can limit losses when there is a failure by a party
to meet its obligations.
The statutory provisions cited above reflect Congressional recognition that (i)
margin is an essential risk-management tool and (ii) uncleared swaps pose greater risks
than cleared swaps. As discussed further below, many commenters expressed concern
that the imposition of margin requirements on uncleared swaps will be very costly for
SDs and MSPs.13 However, margin has been, and will continue to be, required for all
cleared products. Given the Congressional reference to the greater risk of uncleared
swaps and the requirement that margin for such swaps be appropriate for the risk, the
Commission believes that establishing margin requirements for uncleared swaps that are
at least as stringent as those for cleared swaps is necessary to fulfill the statutory
mandate. Within these statutory bounds the Commission has endeavored to limit costs
appropriately, as detailed further below.
The discussion below addresses: (i) the products covered by the proposed rules;
(ii) the market participants covered by the proposed rules; (iii); the nature and timing of
the margin obligations; (iv) the methods of calculating initial margin; (v) the methods of
calculating variation margin; (vi) permissible forms of margin; (vii) custodial
13For purposes of this proposal, the term SD means any swap dealer registered with the Commission.Similarly, the term MSP means any major swap participant registered with the Commission.
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arrangements; (viii) documentation requirements; (ix) the implementation schedule; and
(x) advance notice of proposed rulemaking on the cross-border application of the rules.
In developing the proposed rules, the Commission staff worked closely with the
staff of the Prudential Regulators.14 In most respects, the proposed rules would establish
a similar framework for margin requirements as the Prudential Regulators proposal.
Key differences are noted in the discussion below.
The proposed rules are consistent with the 2013 international framework. In
some instances, as contemplated in the framework, the proposed rules provide more
detail than the framework. In a few other instances, the proposed rules are stricter than
the framework. Any such variations from the framework are noted in the discussion
below.
B. Products
As noted above, section 4s(e)(2)(B)(ii) of the CEA directs the Commission to
establish both initial and variation margin requirements for SDs and MSPs on all swaps
that are not cleared. The scope provision of the proposed rules15states that the proposal
would cover swaps that are uncleared swaps16and that are executed after the applicable
compliance date.17
The term cleared swap is defined in section 1a(7) of the CEA to include any
swap that is cleared by a DCO registered with the Commission. The Commission notes,
however, that SDs and MSPs also clear swaps through foreign clearing organizations that
are not registered with the Commission. The Commission believes that a clearing
14As required by section 4s of the CEA, the Commission staff also has consulted with the SEC staff.15Proposed Regulation 23.150.16The term uncleared swap is defined in proposed Regulation 23.151.17A schedule of compliance dates is set forth in proposed Regulation 23.160.
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organization that is not a registered DCO must meet certain basic standards in order to
avoid creating a mechanism for evasion of the uncleared margin requirements.
Accordingly, the Commission is proposing to include in the definition of cleared swaps
certain swaps that have been accepted for clearing by an entity that has received a no-
action letter from the Commission staff or exemptive relief from the Commission
permitting it to clear such swaps for U.S. persons without being registered as a DCO.18
The Commission requests comment on whether it is appropriate to exclude swaps
that are cleared by an entity that is not a registered DCO. If so, the Commission further
requests comment on whether the proposed rule captures the proper clearing
organizations. For example, should the Commission require that the clearing
organizations be qualifying central counterparties (QCCPs)19or be subject to regulation
and supervision that is consistent with the CPSS-IOSCO Principles for Financial Market
Infrastructures (PFMIs)?
Because the pricing of swaps reflects the credit arrangements under which they
were executed, it could be unfair to the parties and disruptive to the markets to require
that the rules apply to positions executed before the applicable compliance dates. The
rules, however, would permit SDs and MSPs voluntarily to include swaps executed
before the applicable compliance date in portfolios margined pursuant to the proposed
18SeeCFTC Ltr. No. 14-107 (August 18, 2014) (granting no-action relief to Clearing Corporation of IndiaLtd.); CFTC Ltr. No. 14-87 (June 26, 2014) (granting no-action relief to Korea Exchange, Inc.); CFTC Ltr.
No. 14-68 (May 7, 2014) (granting no-action relief to OTC Clearing Hong Kong Limited and certain of itsclearing members); CFTC Ltr. No. 14-27 (Mar. 20, 2014) (extending previous grant of no-action relief toEurex Clearing AG and certain of its clearing members); CFTC Ltr. No. 14-07 (Feb. 6, 2014) (granting no-action relief to ASX Clear (Futures) Pty Limited); and CFTC Ltr. No. 13-73 (Dec. 19, 2013) (extendingprevious grant of no-action relief to Japan Securities Clearing Corporation and certain of its clearingmembers).19A QCCP is a clearing organization that meets the standards to be designated as such set forth by theBasel Committee for Banking Supervision in the report Capital requirements for bank exposures to centralcounterparties (April 2014).
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rules.20 Many market participants might do so to take advantage of netting effects across
transactions.
As a result of the determination by the Secretary of the Treasury to exempt
foreign exchange swaps and foreign exchange forwards from the definition of swap,21the
following transactions would not be subject to the requirements: (i) foreign exchange
swaps; (ii) foreign exchange forwards; and (iii) the fixed, physically settled foreign
exchange transactions associated with the exchange of principal in cross-currency swaps.
In a cross-currency swap, the parties exchange principal and interest rate
payments in one currency for principal and interest rate payments in another currency.
The exchange of principal occurs upon the inception of the swap, with a reversal of the
exchange of principal at a later date that is agreed upon at the inception of the swap. The
foreign exchange transactions associated with the fixed exchange of principal in a cross-
currency swap are closely related to the exchange of principal that occurs in the context
of a foreign exchange forward or swap. Accordingly, the Commission is proposing to
treat that portion of a cross-currency swap that is a fixed exchange of principal in a
manner that is consistent with the treatment of foreign exchange forwards and swaps.
This treatment of cross-currency swaps is limited to cross-currency swaps and does not
extend to any other swaps such as non-deliverable currency forwards.
The Commission requests comment on the proposed treatment of products. In
particular, commenters are invited to discuss the costs and benefits of the proposed
approach. Commenters are urged to quantify the costs and benefits, if practicable.
20See Proposed Regulation 23.154(b)(2) for initial margin and proposed Regulation 23.153(c) for variationmargin.21Determination of Foreign Exchange Swaps and Foreign Exchange Forwards Under the CommodityExchange Act, 77 FR 69694 (Nov. 20, 2012).
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Under the proposed rule, those cooperatives that are financial institutions, such as
credit unions, Farm Credit System banks and associations, and the National Rural
Utilities Cooperative Finance Corporation would be financial end users because their sole
business is lending and providing other financial services to their members, including
engaging in swaps in connection with such loans.27 Cooperatives that are financial end
users may qualify for an exemption from clearing,28and therefore, they may enter into
non-cleared swaps with covered swap entities that are subject to the proposed rule.
The Commission remains concerned, however, that one or more types of financial
entities might escape classification under the specific Federal or State regulatory regimes
included in the proposed definition of a financial end user. Accordingly, the definition
includes two additional prongs. First, the definition would cover an entity that is, or
holds itself out as being, an entity or arrangement that raises money from investors
primarily for the purpose of investing in loans, securities, swaps, funds or other assets for
resale or other disposition or otherwise trading in loans, securities, swaps, funds or other
assets. The Commission requests comment on the extent to which there are (or may be in
the future) pooled investment vehicles that are not captured by the other prongs of the
definition (such as the provisions covering private funds under the Investment Advisers
Act or commodity pools under the CEA). The Commission also requests comment on
27Under the proposed rule, the financing subsidiaries or affiliates of producer or consumer cooperatives
would be non-financial end users.28Section 2(h)(7)(c)(ii) of the CEA and section 3C(g)(4) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 authorizethe CFTC and the SEC, respectively, to exempt small depository institutions, small Farm Credit Systeminstitutions, and small credit unions with total assets of $10 billion or less from the mandatory clearingrequirements for swaps and security-based swaps. Additionally, the CFTC, pursuant to its authority undersection 2(h)(1)(A) of the CEA, enacted 17 CFR 50.51, which allows cooperative financial entities,including those with total assets in excess of $10 billion, to elect an exemption from mandatory clearing ofswaps that: (1) they enter into in connection with originating loans for their members; or (2) hedge ormitigate commercial risk related to loans or swaps with their members.
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dealer safety and soundness and reductions of systemic risk can be achieved, in a fashion
that can be more readily operationalized by covered swap entities. For example, would it
be appropriate to have foreign counterparties certify to CSEs whether they are financial
end users or not? This could be operationally simpler for the CSEs and would avoid the
circumstance where one CSE, in good faith, deemed a foreign counterparty to be a
financial end user and another CSE, in good faith, did not.
The definition of financial entities30would exclude the government of any
country, central banks, multilateral development banks, the Bank for International
Settlements, captive finance companies,
31
and agent affiliates.
32
The exclusion for
sovereign entities, multilateral development banks and the Bank for International
Settlements is consistent with the 2013 international framework and the proposal of the
Prudential Regulators. Captive finance companies and agent affiliates were excluded by
the Dodd-Frank Act from the definition of financial entity subject to mandatory clearing.
The Commission notes that States would not be excluded from the definition of
financial end user, as the term sovereign entity includes only central governments. The
categorization of a State or particular part of a State as a financial end user depends on
30Proposed Regulation 23.151.31A captive finance company is an entity that is excluded from the definition of financial entity undersection 2(h)(7)(c)(iii) of the CEA for purposes of the requirement to submit certain swaps for clearing.That section describes it as an entity whose primary business is providing financing, and uses derivativesfor the purpose of hedging underlying commercial risks related to interest rate and foreign currencyexposures, 90 percent or more of which arise from financing that facilitates the purchase or lease of
products, 90 percent or more of which are manufactured by the parent company or another subsidiary of theparent company.32An agent affiliate is an entity that is an affiliate of a person that qualifies for an exception from therequirement to submit certain trades for clearing. Under section 2(h)(7)(D) of the CEA, an affiliate of aperson that qualifies for an exception under subparagraph (A) (including affiliate entities predominantlyengaged in providing financing for the purchase of the merchandise or manufactured goods of the person)may qualify for the exception only if the affiliate, acting on behalf of the person and as an agent, uses theswap to hedge or mitigate the commercial risk of the person or other affiliate of the person that is not afinancial entity.
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whether that part of the State is otherwise captured by the definition of financial end user.
For example, a State entity that is a governmental plan under ERISA would meet the
definition of financial end user.
For a foreign entity that was not a central government, a foreign regulator could
request a determination whether the entity was a financial end user. Such a determination
could extend to other similarly situated entities in that jurisdiction.
The Commission seeks comment on all aspects of the financial end user
definition, including whether the definition has succeeded in capturing all entities that
should be included. The Commission requests comment on whether there are additional
entities that should be included as financial end users and, if so, how those entities should
be defined. Further, the Commission also requests comment on whether there are
additional entities that should be excluded from the definition of financial end user and
why those particular entities should be excluded. The Commission also requests
comment on whether another approach to defining financial end user (e.g., basing the
financial end user definition on the financial entity definition as in the 2011 proposal)
would provide more appropriate coverage and clarity, and whether covered swap entities
could operationalize such an approach as part of their regular procedures for taking on
new counterparties.
The Commission requests comment on the costs and benefits of the proposed
definition of financial end user. Commenters are urged to quantify the costs and benefits,
if practicable. Commenters also may suggest alternatives to the proposed approach
where the commenters believe that the alternatives would be appropriate under the CEA.
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While adoption of a material swaps exposure threshold is consistent with the 2013
international framework,38the Commission and the Prudential Regulators, are proposing
to set the materiality standard lower than the international standard. However, the lower
standard was chosen in order to be consistent with the intent of the international
standards, which was to require collection of margin only when the amount exceeds $65
million, as explained below.
The 2013 international framework defines smaller financial end users as those
counterparties that have a gross aggregate amount of covered swapsbelow 8 billion,
which, at current exchange rates, is approximately equal to $11 billion. The preliminary
view of the Commission and the Prudential Regulators is that defining material swaps
exposure as a gross notional exposure of $3 billion, rather than $11 billion, is appropriate
because it reduces systemic risk without imposing undue burdens on covered swap
entities, and therefore, is consistent with the objectives of the Dodd-Frank Act. This
view is based on data and analyses that have been conducted since the publication of the
2013 international framework.
Specifically, the Commission and the Prudential Regulators have reviewed actual
initial margin requirements for a sample of cleared swaps. These analyses indicate that
there are a significant number of cases in which a financial end user would have a
material swaps exposure level below $11 billion but would have a swap portfolio with an
initial margin collection amount that significantly exceeds the proposed permitted initial
margin threshold amount of $65 million. The intent of both the Commission and the
2013 international framework is that the initial margin threshold provide smaller
38BCBS/IOSCO Report at 9.
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counterparties with relief from the operational burden of measuring and tracking initial
margin collection amounts that are expected to be below $65 million. Setting the
material swaps exposure threshold at $11 billion appears to be inconsistent with this
intent, based on the recent analyses.
The table below summarizes actual initial margin requirements for 4,686
counterparties engaged in cleared interest rate swaps. Each counterparty represents a
particular portfolio of cleared interest rate swaps. Each counterparty had a swap portfolio
with a total gross notional amount less than $11 billion and each is a customer of a CCPs
clearing member. Column (1) displays the initial margin amount as a percentage of the
gross notional amount. Column (2) reports the initial margin, in millions of dollars that
would be required on a portfolio with a gross notional amount of $11 billion.
Initial Margin Amounts on 4,686 Cleared Interest Rate Swap Portfolios
Column (1)Initial Margin Amount as
Percentage of Gross Notional
Amount (%)
Column (2)Initial Margin Amount on an $11Billion Gross Notional Portfolio
($MM)Average 2.1 231
25th Percentile 0.6 66
50t Percentile 1.4 154
75 Percentile 2.7 297
As shown in the table above, the average initial margin rate across all 4,686
counterparties, reported in Column (1), is 2.1 percent, which would equate to an initial
margin collection amount, reported in Column (2), of $231 million on an interest rate
swap portfolio with a gross notional amount of $11 billion. This average initial margin
collection amount significantly exceeds the proposed permitted threshold amount of $65
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a swap portfolio with a gross notional amount of $11 billion. Accordingly, this data also
indicates that the initial margin collection amount on a swap portfolio with a gross
notional size of $11 billion could be significantly larger than the proposed permitted
initial margin threshold of $65 million.
In addition to the information provided in the tables above, the Commissions
preliminary view is that additional considerations suggest that the initial margin
collection amounts associated with uncleared swaps could be even greater than those
reported in the tables above. The tables above represent initial margin requirements on
cleared interest rate and credit default index swaps. Uncleared swaps in other asset
classes, such as single name equity or single name credit default swaps, are likely to be
riskier and hence would require even more initial margin. In addition, uncleared swaps
often contain complex features, such as nonlinearities, that make them even riskier and
would hence require more initial margin. Finally, uncleared swaps are generally
expected to be less liquid than cleared swaps and must be margined, under the proposed
rule, according to a ten-day close-out period rather than the five-day period required for
cleared swaps. The data presented above pertains to cleared swaps that are margined
according to a five-day and not a ten-day close-out period. The requirement to use a ten-
day close-out period would further increase the initial margin requirements of uncleared
versus cleared swaps.
In light of the data and considerations noted above, the Commissionspreliminary
view is that it is appropriate and consistent with the intent of the 2013 international
framework to identify a material swaps exposure with a gross notional amount of $3
billion rather than $11 billion (8 billion) as is suggested by the 2013 international
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would require the CSEs to continue to pay or collect variation margin each business day
until the swap is terminated or expires.52
Two-way variation margin would protect the safety and soundness of CSEs for
the same reasons discussed above in connection with initial margin. Two-way variation
margin has been a keystone of the ability of DCOs to manage risk. Each day, starting on
the day after execution, current exposure is removed from the market through the
payment and collection of variation margin.
If two-way variation margin were not required for uncleared swaps between CSEs
and counterparties that are swap entities or financial end users, current exposures might
accumulate beyond the financial capacity of a counterparty. In contrast to initial margin,
which is designed to cover potential future exposures, variation margin addresses actual
current exposures, that is, losses that have already occurred. Unchecked accumulation of
such exposures was one of the characteristics of the financial crisis which, in turn, led to
the enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act.53 As with initial margin, the Commission believes
that requiring covered swap entities both to collect and pay margin with these
counterparties effectively reduces systemic risk by protecting both the covered swap
entity and its counterparty from the effects of a default.
In contrast to the initial margin requirement, which would only apply to financial
end users with material swaps exposure, the proposed variation margin requirement
would apply to all financial end users regardless of whether the entity had material swaps
52Proposed Regulation 23.153(b).53See The Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, The Financial Crisis Inquiry Report: Final Report of theNational Commission on the Causes of the Financial and Economic Crisis in the United States (OfficialGovernment Edition) at 265-268 (2011), available at http://fcic-static.law.stanford.edu/cdn_media/fcic-reports/fcic_final_report_full.pdf.
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In order to reduce transaction costs, the proposal would establish a minimum
transfer amount of $650,000.66 Initial and variation margin payments would not be
required to be made if the payment were below that amount. This amount is consistent
with international standards.67 It represents an amount sufficiently small that the level of
risk reduction might not be worth the transaction costs of transferring the money. It
would affect only the timing of collection; it would not change the amount of margin that
must be collected once the $650,000 level was exceeded.
For example, if a party posted $80 million as initial margin on Monday and the
requirement increased to $80,400,000 on Tuesday, the party would not be required to
post additional funds on Tuesday because the $400,000 increase would be less than the
minimum transfer amount. If, however, on Wednesday, the requirement increased by
another $400,000 to $80,800,000, the party would be required to post the entire $800,000
additional amount.
The Commission requests comment on the $65 million threshold and the
$650,000 minimum transfer amount. The Commission requests comment on the costs
and benefits of the proposed approach. Commenters are urged to quantify the costs and
benefits, if practicable. Commenters also may suggest alternatives to the proposed
approach where the commenters believe that the alternatives would be appropriate under
the CEA.
2. Models
a. Commission Approval
66Proposed Regulation 23.154(a)(3).67BCBS/IOSCO Report at 9.
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expedited approval of models that a Prudential Regulator had already approved. For
example, if a Prudential Regulator had approved the model of a depository institution
registered as an SD, Commission review of a comparable model used by a non-bank
affiliate of that SD would be greatly facilitated. Similarly, the Commission would
coordinate with the SEC for CSEs that are dually registered and would coordinate with
foreign regulators that had approved margin models for foreign CSEs. For CSEs that that
wished to use models that were not reviewed by a Prudential Regulator, the SEC, or a
foreign regulator, the Commission would coordinate, if possible, with the National
Futures Association (NFA) as each CSE would be required to be a member of the
NFA.
The Commission requests comment on all aspects of the proposed margin
approval process. Specifically, the Commission requests comment on the
appropriateness and feasibility of coordinating with the Prudential Regulators, the SEC,
foreign regulators, and the NFA in this regard.
The Commission is also considering whether it would be appropriate to provide
for provisional approval upon the filing of an application pending review. The
Commission requests comment on the appropriateness of such an approach.
In order to expedite the review of models further, the Commission is proposing to
delegate authority to staff to perform the functions described above. As is the case with
existing delegations to staff, the Commission would continue to reserve the right to
perform these functions itself at any time.
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(iii) Stress Calibration
The proposed rule requires the initial margin model to be calibrated to a period of
financial stress. In particular, the initial margin model must employ a stress period
calibration for each broad asset class (agricultural commodity, energy commodity, metal
commodity, other commodity, credit, equity, and interest rate and foreign exchange).
The stress period calibration employed for each broad asset class must be appropriate to
the specific asset class in question. While a common stress period calibration may be
appropriate for some asset classes, a common stress period calibration for all asset classes
would only be considered appropriate if it is appropriate for each specific underlying
asset class. Also, the time period used to inform the stress period calibration must
include at least one year, but no more than five years, of equally-weighted historical data.
This proposed requirement is intended to balance the tradeoff between shorter and
longer data spans. Shorter data spans are sensitive to evolving market conditions but may
also overreact to short-term and idiosyncratic spikes in volatility. Longer data spans are
less sensitive to short-term market developments but may also place too little emphasis
on periods of financial stress, resulting in requirements that are too low. The requirement
that the data be equally weighted is intended to establish a degree of consistency in model
calibration while also ensuring that particular weighting schemes do not result in
excessive margin requirements during short-term bouts of heightened volatility.
The model must use risk factors sufficient to measure all material price risks
inherent in the transactions for which initial margin is being calculated. The risk
categories must include, but should not be limited to, foreign exchange or interest rate
risk, credit risk, equity risk, agricultural commodity risk, energy commodity risk, metal
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To address these potential inequities, the Commission is proposing an adjustment
to the table-based initial margin requirement. Specifically, the Commission would allow
a CSE to calculate a net-to-gross ratio adjustment.81
The net-to-gross ratio compares the net current replacement cost of the uncleared
portfolio (in the numerator) with the gross current replacement cost of the uncleared
portfolio (in the denominator). The net current replacement cost is the cost of replacing
the entire portfolio of swaps that is covered under an eligible master netting agreement.
The gross current replacement cost is the cost of replacing those swaps that have a strictly
positive replacement cost.
For example, consider a portfolio that consists of two uncleared swaps in which
the mark-to-market value of the first swap is $10 (i.e., the CSE is owed $10 from its
counterparty) and the mark-to-market value of the second swap is -$5 (i.e., the CSE owes
$5 to its counterparty). The net current replacement cost is $5 ($10-$5), the gross current
replacement cost is $10, and the net-to-gross ratio would be 5/10 or 0.5.82
The net-to-gross ratio and gross standardized initial margin amounts provided in
the table are used in conjunction with the notional amount of the transactions in the
underlying swap portfolio to arrive at the total initial margin requirement as follows:
Standardized Initial Margin = 0.4 x Gross Initial Margin + 0.6 x NGR x Gross
Initial Margin
81This calculation is set forth in proposed Regulation 23.154(c)(2).82Note that in this example, whether or not the counterparties have agreed to exchange variation marginhas no effect on the net-to-gross ratio calculation, i.e., the calculation is performed without considering anyvariation margin payments. This is intended to ensure that the net-to-gross ratio calculation reflects theextent to which the uncleared swaps generally offset each other and not whether the counterparties haveagreed to exchange variation margin. As an example, if a swap dealer engaged in a single sold creditderivative with a counterparty, then the net-to-gross calculation would be 1.0 whether or not the dealerreceived variation margin from its counterparty.
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threshold, a CSE decided to collect initial margin to protect itself against the credit risk of
a particular counterparty, the CSE could accept any form of collateral.
Except for U.S. dollars and the currency in which the payment obligations of the
swap is required, assets posted as required initial margin would be subject to haircuts in
order to address the possibility that the value of the collateral could decline during the
period that it took to liquidate a swap position in default. The proposed collateral
haircuts have been calibrated to be broadly consistent with valuation changes observed
during periods of financial stress.
Because the value of noncash collateral and foreign currency may change over
time, the proposal would require a CSE to monitor the value of such collateral previously
collected to satisfy initial margin requirements and, to the extent the value of such
collateral has decreased, to collect additional collateral with a sufficient value to ensure
that all applicable initial margin requirements remain satisfied.95
The Commission seeks comment on all aspects of the proposed requirements for
eligible collateral for initial margin. In particular, the Commission requests comments on
whether the list should be expanded or contracted in any way. If so, subject to what
terms and conditions?
The Commission requests comment on the costs and benefits of the proposed
approach. Commenters are urged to quantify the costs and benefits, if practicable.
Commenters also may suggest alternatives to the proposed approach where the
commenters believe that the alternatives would be appropriate under the CEA.
95Proposed Regulation 23.156(a)(4).
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purpose of the proposed custodial arrangements is preservation of the financial integrity
of the markets and the U.S. financial system although the arrangements will also have the
effect of protecting individual market participants. Section 4s(l) is not made superfluous
by the proposed rules because it would still be available for financial end users with less
than material swaps exposure, for financial end users that post initial margin in excess of
the required amount, and for non-financial end users that post initial margin. Such
entities would be posting margin, by agreement, with SDs or MSPs. Section 4s(l) would
provide them with an opportunity to obtain additional protection if they desired.
The Commission previously adopted rules implementing section 4s(l).
103
The
Commission is now proposing to amend those rules to reflect the approach described
above where segregation of initial margin would be mandatory under certain
circumstances. The Commission is proposing three changes.
First, the proposal would amend 23.701(a)(1) to read as follows: Notify each
counterparty to such transaction that the counterparty has the right to require that any
Initial Margin the counterparty provides in connection with such transaction be
segregated in accordance with 23.702 and 23.703 except in those circumstances where
segregation is mandatory pursuant to 23.157. (New language in italics.)
Second, the proposal would amend 23.701(d) to read as follows: Prior to
confirming the terms of any such swap, the swap dealer or major swap participant shall
obtain from the counterparty confirmation of receipt by the person specified in paragraph
(c) of this section of the notification specified in paragraph (a) of this section, and an
election, if applicable, to require such segregation or not. The swap dealer or major swap
103Protection of Collateral of Counterparties to Uncleared Swaps; Treatment of Securities in a PortfolioMargining Account in a Commodity Broker Bankruptcy, 78 FR 66621 (Nov. 6, 2013).
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participant shall maintain such confirmation and such election as business records
pursuant to 1.31 of this chapter. (New language in italics.)
Third, the proposal would amend 23.701(f) to read as follows: A counterpartys
election, if applicable, to require segregation of Initial Margin or not to require such
segregation, may be changed at the discretion of the counterparty upon written notice
delivered to the swap dealer or major swap participant, which changed election shall be
applicable to all swaps entered into between the parties after such delivery. (New
language in italics.)
The Commission seeks comment on all aspects of the proposed requirements
regarding custodial arrangements.
The Commission requests comment on the costs and benefits of the proposed
approach. Commenters are urged to quantify the costs and benefits, if practicable.
Commenters also may suggest alternatives to the proposed approach where the
commenters believe that the alternatives would be appropriate under the CEA.
I. Documentation
The proposal sets forth documentation requirements for CSEs.104 For uncleared
swaps between a CSE and a covered counterparty, the documentation would be required
to provide the CSE with the contractual right and obligation to exchange initial margin
and variation margin in such amounts, in such form, and under such circumstances as are
required by 23.150 through 23.160 of this part. For uncleared swaps between a CSE
and a non-financial entity, the documentation would be required to specify whether initial
and/or variation margin will be exchanged and, if so, to include the information set forth
104Proposed Regulation 23.158.
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Commission may propose and ultimately adopt one of the three approaches with
modifications.
1. The Cross-Border Guidance Approach
Under the first option, the Commission would apply the margin requirements
consistent with the Cross-Border Guidance. The Commission stated in the Guidance that
it would generally treat the margin requirements (for uncleared swaps) as a transaction-
level requirement. Consistent with the rationale stated in the Guidance, under this
approach, the proposed margin requirements would apply to a U.S. SD/MSP (other than a
foreign branch of a U.S. bank that is a SD/ MSP) for all of their uncleared swaps (as
applicable), irrespective of whether the counterparty is a U.S. person110or not, without
substituted compliance.
On the other hand, under this approach, the proposed margin requirements would
apply to a non-U.S. SD/MSP (whether or not it is a guaranteed affiliate111or an
affiliate conduit112) only with respect to its uncleared swaps with a U.S. person
counterparty (including a foreign branch of U.S. bank that is a SD/ MSP) and a non-U.S.
counterparty that is guaranteed by a U.S. person or is an affiliate conduit. Where the
110The scope of the term U.S. person as used in the Cross-Border Guidance Approach and the Entity-Level Approach would be the same as under the Guidance. See Guidance at 45316-45317 for a summaryof the Commissions interpretation of the term U.S. person.111Under the Guidance, id. at 45318, the term guaranteed affiliate refers to a non-U.S. person that is anaffiliate of a U.S. person and that is guaranteed by a U.S. person. The scope of the term guarantee underthe Cross-Border Guidance Approach and the Entity-Level Approach would be the same as under note 267of the Guidance and accompanying text.112
Under the Guidance, id. at 45359, the factors that are relevant to the consideration of whether a person isan affiliate conduit include whether: (i) the non-U.S. person is majority-owned, directly or indirectly, bya U.S. person; (ii) the non-U.S. person controls, is controlled by, or is under common control with the U.S.person; (iii) the non-U.S. person, in the regular course of business, engages in swaps with non-U.S. thirdparty(ies) for the purpose of hedging or mitigating risks faced by, or to take positions on behalf of, its U.S.affiliate(s), and enters into offsetting swaps or other arrangements with such U.S. affiliate(s) in order totransfer the risks and benefits of such swaps with third-party(ies) to its U.S. affiliates; and (iv) the financialresults of the non-U.S. person are included in the consolidated financial statements of the U.S. person.Other facts and circumstances also may be relevant.
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Below is a summary of how the margin requirements would apply under the
Cross-Border Guidance Approach.
U.S. Person (other
than Foreign
Branch of U.S.
Bank that is a
Swap Dealer or
MSP)
Foreign Branch of
U.S. Bank that is a
Swap Dealer or
MSP
Non-U.S. Person
Guaranteed by, or
Affiliate Conduit
of, a U.S. Person
Non-U.S. Person
Not Guaranteed
by, and Not an
Affiliate Conduit
of, a U.S. Person
U.S. Swap Dealer or MSP
(including an affiliate of a
non-U.S. person)
Apply Apply Apply Apply
Foreign Branch of U.S.
Bank that is a Swap Dealer
or MSPApply Substituted
ComplianceSubstitutedCompliance
SubstitutedCompliance
Non-U.S. Swap Dealer or
MSP (including an affiliate
of a U.S. person)
Apply SubstitutedCompliance
SubstitutedCompliance
Do Not Apply
2. Prudential Regulators Approach
Under the second option, the Commission would adopt the Prudential Regulators
approach to cross-border application of the margin requirements.114 Under the Prudential
Regulators proposal, the Prudential Regulators would not assert authority over trades
between a non-U.S. SD/MSP115that is not guaranteed by a U.S. person and either a (i)
non-U.S. SD/MSP that is not guaranteed by a U.S. person or (ii) a non-U.S. person that is
not guaranteed by a U.S. person. The Prudential Regulators approach is generally
114See Section 9 of Margin and Capital Requirements for Covered Swap Entities, 12 CFR Part 237 (Sept.3, 2014), available at http://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/bcreg/bcreg20140903c1.pdf.115Under the Prudential Regulators approach, if an SD/MSP is under the control of a U.S. person, it wouldnot be considered a non-U.S. SD/MSP.
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consistent with the Entity-Level Approach described below, with the exception of the
application of the margin requirements to certain non-U.S. SD/MSPs.
However, the Prudential Regulators proposal in this regard would be consistent
with the CommissionsCross-Border Guidance Approach to margin requirements with
respect to a trade between a non-U.S. SD/MSP and a non-U.S. person that is not
guaranteed by a U.S. person. But under the definition of foreign covered swap entity in
the Prudential Regulators approach, a non-U.S. SD/MSP controlled by a U.S. person
would not be a foreign covered swap entity, and thus, would not qualify for the exclusion
from the margin requirement. In addition, the Prudential Regulators proposal
incorporates a control test for purposes of determining whether a registered SD/MSP
(or in the Prudential Regulators proposal, a covered swap entity) is not a foreign
entity.
3. Entity-Level Approach
Under the third option, the Commission would treat the margin requirements as
an entity-level requirement. Under this Entity-Level Approach, the Commission would
apply its cross-border rules on margin on a firm-wide level, irrespective of whether the
counterparty is a U.S. person.116 At the same time, in recognition of international comity,
the Commission is considering, where appropriate, to allow SDs/MSPs to satisfy the
margin requirements by complying with a comparable regime in the relevant foreign
jurisdiction, as described in the table below. This approach would be intended to address
the concern that the source of the risk to a firmgiven that the non-U.S. SD/MSP has
sufficient contact with the United States to require registration as an SD/MSPis not
116However, substituted compliance may be available under certain circumstances, as described in theGuidance for entity-level requirements.
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confined to its uncleared swaps with U.S. counterparties or to its uncleared swaps
executed within the United States. A firms losses in uncleared swaps with non-U.S.
counterparties, for example, could have a direct and significant impact on the firms
financial integrity and on the U.S. financial system.
Counterparty A Counterparty B Applicable Requirements
1. U.S. SD/MSP U.S. person U.S. (All)
2. U.S. SD/MSP Non U.S. person guaranteedby a U.S. person
U.S. (All)
3. Non-U.S. SD/MSP guaranteedby a U.S. person
U.S. person not registered asan SD/MSP
U.S. (All)
4. Non-U.S. SD/MSP guaranteedby a U.S. person
Non-U.S. person guaranteedby a U.S. person
U.S. (All)
5. U.S. SD/MSP Non-U.S. person notguaranteed by a U.S. person
U.S. (Initial Margin collectedby U.S. SD/MSP)
Substituted Compliance(Initial Margin collected by
non-U.S. person notguaranteed by a U.S. person)
U.S. (Variation Margin)
6. Non-U.S. SD/MSP guaranteed bya U.S. person
Non-U.S. person not guaranteedby a U.S. person
U.S. (Initial Margin collectedby non-U.S. SD/MSP
guaranteed by a U.S. person)
Substituted Compliance(Initial Margin collected by
non-U.S. person notguaranteed by a U.S. person)
U.S. (Variation Margin)
7. Non-U.S. SD/MSP notguaranteed by a U.S. person
U.S. person not registered asan SD/MSP
Substituted Compliance (All)
8 Non-U.S. SD/MSP notguaranteed by a U.S. person
Non-U.S. person guaranteedby a U.S. person
Substituted Compliance (All)
9. Non-U.S. SD/MSP notguaranteed by a U.S. person
Non-U.S. SD/MSP notguaranteed by a U.S. person
Substituted Compliance(All)
Substituted Compliance(All)
10. Non-U.S. SD/MSP notguaranteed by a U.S. person
Non-U.S. person notregistered as an SD/MSP and
not guaranteed by a U.S.person
B. Questions
In this Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, the Commission requests
comment on all aspects of these options to the cross-border application of the margin
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requirements. In particular, the Commission is interested in comments relating to the
costs and benefits of the various approaches so that it can take that into consideration
when developing proposed rules relating to the cross-border application of the margin
rules. Commenters are encouraged to address, among other things, the following
questions:
1. Under the Guidance Approach and Prudential Regulators Approach, certain trades
involving a non-U.S. SD/MSP would be excluded from the Commissions margin
rules. The Commission seeks comment on whether this exclusion is over- or
under-inclusive, and if so, please explain why.
2. Each of the options provides for substituted compliance under certain situations.
In light of the equal or greater supervisory interest of the foreign regulator in
certain circumstances, the Commission is seeking comment on whether the scope
of substituted compliance under each option is appropriate.
3. The Commission is seeking comments on whether, in defining a non-U.S. covered
swap entity, it should use the concept of control, in determining whether a
covered swap entity is (or should be treated as) a non-U.S. covered swap entity.
If the Commission uses a concept of control, should it be the same as that used by
the Prudential Regulators, or should it be different?
4. In the Commissions view, it is the substance, rather than the form, of an
agreement, arrangement or structure that should determine whether it should be
considered a guarantee. The Commission invites comment on how the term
guarantee should be construed or defined in the context of these margin rules.
For example, should the definition cover the multitude of different agreements,
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Currently, there are approximately 100 SDs and MSPs provisionally registered
with the Commission. The Commission further estimates that approximately 60 of the
SDs and MSPs will be subject to the Commissions margin rules as they are not subject
to a Prudential Regulator. The Commission further estimates that all SDs and MSPs will
seek to obtain Commission approval to use models for computing initial margin
requirements. The Commission estimates that the initial margin model requirements will
impose an average of 240 burden hours per registrant.
Based upon the above, the estimated additional hour burden for collection 3038-
0024 was calculated as follows:
Number of registrants: 60.
Frequency of collection: Initial submission and periodic updates.
Estimated annual responses per registrant: 1.
Estimated aggregate number of annual responses: 60.
Estimated annual hour burden per registrant: 240 hours.
Estimated aggregate annual hour burden: 14,400 hours [60 registrants x 240
hours per registrant].
3. Information Collection Comments
The Commission invites the public and other Federal agencies to comment on any
aspect of the reporting burdens discussed above. Pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(B),
the Commission solicits comments in order to: (1) evaluate whether the proposed
collection of information is necessary for the proper performance of the functions of the
Commission, including the information will have practical utility; (2) evaluate the
accuracy of the Commissions estimate of the burden of the proposed collection of
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information; (3) determine whether there are ways to enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be collected; and (4) minimize the burden of the collection of
information on those who are to respond, including through the use of automated
collection techniques or other forms of information technology.
Comments may be submitted directly to the Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, by fax at (202) 395-6566 or by e-mail at [email protected].
Please provide the Commission with a copy of submitted comments so that all comments
can be summarized and addressed in the final rule preamble. Refer to the ADDRESSES
section of this notice of proposed rulemaking for comment submission instructions to the
Commission. A copy of the supporting statements for the collections of information
discussed above may be obtained by visiting RegInfo.gov. OMB is required to make a
decision concerning the collection of information between 30 and 60 days after
publication of this document in the Federal Register. Therefore, a comment is best
assured of having its full effect if OMB receives it within 30 days of publication.
C. Cost-Benefit Considerations
1. Introduction
Section 15(a) of the CEA requires the Commission to consider the costs and
benefits of its actions before promulgating a regulation under the CEA or issuing certain
orders.125 Section 15(a) further specifies that the costs and benefits shall be evaluated in
light of five broad areas of market and public concern: (1) protection of market
participants and the public; (2) efficiency, competitiveness, and financial integrity of
futures markets; (3) price discovery; (4) sound risk management practices; and (5) other
1257 U.S.C. 19(a).
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public interest considerations. The Commission considers the costs and benefits resulting
from its discretionary determinations with respect to the section 15(a) factors.
The Commission recognizes that there is an inherent trade-off involved in setting
minimum collateral standards. Such standards could increase margin requirements,
which in turn would require market participants to post additional collateral. Posting
additional collateral may result in opportunity costs in terms of lost returns from
investing the funds in collateral, or in interest expenses incurred to raise additional funds.
Such costs may reduce the investment returns for market participants posting collateral.
On the other hand, minimum collateral standards help to mitigate counterparty credit risk.
This is achieved by requiring market participants to post collateral that is sufficient to
cover potential losses from default most of the time. The potential reduction in
investment returns for market participants posting collateral might also be offset to some
degree by improvements in pricing as a result of the reduction in risk of the swap. The
reduction in counterparty credit risk from the posting of collateral may result in tighter
spreads quoted by liquidity providers.126 From a regulatory perspective, minimum
collateral standards introduce a trade-off between potentially lowering anticipated returns
for market participants and lowering systemic risk from counterparty defaults. A
substantial loss from a default might induce a cascade of defaults in a financial network,
and perhaps, induce a liquidity crisis and the seizing up of parts of the financial system.
In developing this proposal, the Commission has sought to reduce the potential lowering
of investment returns of market participants by allowing them to use approved models to
126Posting collateral for swap transactions may result in other changes in the relationship between the CSEand counterparty instead of just pricing terms of swap contracts. For instance, bank CSEs might lower therequired minimum balance on checking accounts that counterparty maintain with the bank, instead.
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Generally, a CSE must collect IM from a counterparty that is (i) a swap entity, or
(ii) a financial end-user with material swaps exposure ($3 billion notional during June,
July and August of the previous year) in an amount that is no less than the greater of: (i)
zero (0) or (ii) the IM collection amount for such swap less the IM threshold amount ($65
millionnot including any portion of the IM threshold amount already applied by the
covered swap entity or its affiliates to other swaps with the counterparty or its affiliates).
Generally, a CSE must post IM for any swap with a counterparty that is a
financial end-user with material swaps exposure (see above). A CSE is not required to
collect IM from or post IM to commercial end-users.
There are two general methods for calculating initial margin, the standardized
approach and the model-based approach. Under the standardized approach, the CSE
must calculate IM collection amounts using a table/grid that is set out in the proposed
rule.
The model-based approach calculates an amount of IM that is equal to the
potential future exposure (PFE) of a swap or a netting set of swaps. PFE is an estimate
of the one-tailed 99% confidence interval for an increase in the value of the swap over a
10 day period (i.e., VaR model for a 10 day period). The model-based approach must
meet the following requirements: (1) the model must have prior written approval by the
Commission; (2) a CSE must demonstrate that the initial margin model continuously
satisfies the rules requirements; (3) a covered swap entity must notify the Commission in
writing prior to making material changes to the model, such as: (a) extending the use of
the model to an additional product type; (b) making any change that results in material
changes to the amount of IM; or (c) making any material changes to the assumptions of
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its affiliates and (ii) its counterparty and its affiliates, have an average daily aggregate
notional amount of uncleared swaps, uncleared security-based swaps, foreign exchange
forwards and foreign exchange swaps for each business day in June, July and August
2016 that exceeds $3 trillion. The compliance date is December 1, 2017when both (i)
the CSE and its affiliates and (ii) its counterparty and its affiliates, have an average daily
aggregate notional amount of uncleared swaps, uncleared security-based swaps, foreign
exchange forwards and foreign exchange swaps for each business day in June, July and
August 2017 that exceeds $2 trillion. The compliance date is December 1, 2018when
both (i) the CSE and its affiliates and (ii) its counterparty and its affiliates, have an
average daily aggregate notional amount of uncleared swaps, uncleared security-based
swaps, foreign exchange forwards and foreign exchange swaps for each business day in
June, July and August 2018 that exceeds $1 trillion. The compliance date isDecember 1,
2019 for any other covered swap entity with respect to uncleared swaps and uncleared
security-based swaps entered into with any other counterparty.
3. Status Quo Baseline
The baseline against which this proposed rule will be compared is the status quo.
This requires the Commission to assess what is the current practice within the swaps
industry. At present, swap market participants are not legally required to post either
initial or variation margin when engaging in uncleared swaps. Nevertheless, for risk
management purposes, many market participants currently undertake this practice.
In determining the current market practices, the Commission utilized several
sources of swaps market data. These sources include (i) the ISDA Margin Survey 2014
(ISDA Survey), (ii) BISs Quantitative impact study on margin requirements for non-
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c. Estimates using SDR Data
Finally, the Commission reports aggregated data derived from data submitted to
swap data repositories in a weekly swaps market report.133 Open swap positions in credit
and interest rates as of June 27, 2014 for CFTC regulated CSEs (59 entities) are presented
below. The table also includes total notional amount of swaps transacted by these entities
in credit and interest rates during the period January to June 2014:
Open Swaps as of June 27, 2014
Notional amount in US$ billions (double count)
Uncleared Cleared
Interest Rates 253,434 223,744
Credit 10,039 879
Aggregate Notional Swaps Transaction (January
to June 2014)
Notional amount in US$ billions (double count)
Uncleared Cleared
Interest Rates 12,630 39,816
Credit 1,362 5,717
The Commission notes that OCCs Economic Impact Analysis for Swaps Margin
Proposed Rule134has estimated that in year one, OCC-supervised institutions will have to
post total initial margin of approximately $331 billion with approximately $283 billion in
interest rate and credit swaps. Using annualized notional swaps activity for just interest
rate and credit, and adopting a similar methodology to the OCCs Economic Impact
Analysis, the Commission estimates that the 59 CFTC regulated CSEs will have to post
initial margin in year one of approximately $340 billion or possibly less as noted below.
The OCCs estimate and the Commissions estimate are notbased on the same data. The
133See http://www.cftc.gov/MarketReports/SwapsReports/index.htm.134See http://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=OCC-2011-0008-0131.
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OCCs estimates are based on transactions activity implied by the open swaps positions
from Call Report schedule RC-L. The Commissions estimates are based on transaction
data reported to SDRs. To the extent SDR data includes financial end users without
material swaps exposure, nonfinancial end users, sovereigns, and multilateral
development banks who do not have to post collateral, the amount of required initial
margin would be less than the Commissions estimate of approximately $340 billion.
Further, the amount of required initial margin will be lower as a result of the $65 million
threshold, too. While the OCC has made certain assumptions regarding coverage of the
swaps activity by its regulated entities during the different compliance dates, the
Commission does not have access to relevant data to make similar estimates. The
Commissions initial margin estimates assume that uncleared swaps activities by CFTC
regulated CSEs in these two asset classes will remain the same. These differences in
approaches and the data sources means that the Commissions estimates will likely have
overstated the actual margins that will be posted in year one after enactment.
The Commission points out that prudentially regulated CSEs, CFTC regulated
CSEs, and SEC regulated CSEs will trade with each other. Thus, one cannot simply add
the margin estimates by various regulators as this will double count the amount of initial
margin collateral for swap transactions between differently regulated CSEs. The
Commission seeks comment on how it should consider or allocate the common costs and
benefits of the margin collateral that is required by more than one CSE regulator.
Further, the Commission seeks comments on all aspects of its initial margin estimates and
methods. Commenters are encouraged to quantify, if practical.
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4. Section 15(a) Factors
a. Protection of Market Participants and the Public
Margin helps to protect market participants from counterparty credit risk. It also
helps to protect the public by lowering the probability of a financial crisis, because
margin helps to impede or contain the risk of a cascade of defaults occurring. A cascade
occurs when one participant defaulting causes subsequent defaults by its counterparties,
and so on, resulting in a domino effect and a potential financial crisis.
The derivatives positions of swap market participants are limited by their ability
to post margin. If the ability to post margin is binding, then required margin may reduce
swap market exposures for some participants. In many cases, reduced swap market
exposure for a participant may lower their probability of default, all else equal. Further,
when a swap participant defaults, the margin can be used to absorb the losses to the
counterparty. This facilitates the non-defaulting party reestablishing a similar position
with a new counterparty.
In requiring daily variation margin payments, the proposed rule would require
counterparties to mark-to-market all open swap positions. The process of marking swap
contracts to market or model, forces participants to recognize losses promptly and to
adjust collateral accordingly. This helps to prevent the accumulation of large
unrecognized losses and exposures. Consequently, this frequent settling up may reduce
the probability of default of the party who has been experiencing losses on the contract.
The proposed rule however, requires a minimum payment amount of $650,000, which
provides counterparties with operational relief. This minimum payment does not lower
the amount owed, but permits deferral of margin exchanges until it is operationally
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efficient. In providing this relief the Commission believes that it will lower the overall
burden on the financial system, but as a result of this amount being relatively small the
Commission believes this deferral would not noticeably increase the overall risk to the
financial system and the general public.
The proposed rule also provides that initial margin must be held at a third-party
custodian. The margin amount held there cannot be rehypothecated with both parties
having access to the collateral. This access is designed to prevent a liquidity event,
inducing a cascading event. With rehypothecation, the collateral of some parties may be
linked or used as collateral posted for other positionsthe same collateral is posted for
many positions for many different entities, resulting in a rehypothecation chain. When a
default or liquidity event occurs at one link along the rehypothecation chain, it might
induce further defaults or liquidity events for other links in the rehypothecation chain,
because access to the collateral for other positions may be obstructed by a default along
the chain, which may result in a liquidity event along the entire chain.
The cost of providing initial margin collateral reflects the cost of obtaining the
assets used as collateral, which is either the cost of raising external funds, or the foregone
income that could been earned had the firm invested in a different asset (opportunity
cost). The effective cost is the difference between the relevant cost of obtaining eligible
assets and the return on the assets that can be pledged as collateral. The effective cost
will likely differ between entities and even desks in the same entity as well as over time
as conditions change. At one extreme, it may be that some entities providing initial
margin, such as pension funds and asset managers, will provide assets as initial margin
that they already own and would have owned even if no requirements were in place. In
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no aggregate liquidity costs. An entity that suffers a reduction in liquidity from posting
variation margin is offset by an increase in the liquidity enjoyed by the entity receiving
the variation margin because variation margin is posted with cash. The Commission
notes that if the margin payments are not instantaneous, however, there may be a slight
loss in liquidity while payments are being posted.
Posting margin may discourage some parties from hedging certain risks because it
is no longer cost effective for them to do so. Consequently, this may reduce liquidity for
some swap contracts. This concern is mitigated somewhat